Tuesday, January 25, 2011

I've been catching up on my technical reading, and this weekend was spent on Responsive Enhancement1. I'd read about it before on Jeremy Keith's blog and his comments on proportion perfection over pixel perfection2 made me think. Finally, Kayla's report3 on Smashing Magazine about responsive web design coming up as I was thinking about making bluesmoon.info more mobile friendly is what prompted me to study it in detail.

I'm not going to go into the details of responsive enhancement, the references at the end of this article serve that purpose. This article lists what I think are best practices and my reasons for them.

@media queries

As a web designer or developer, you want your page to be easily viewable across different devices and screen sizes. It shouldn't matter whether your user uses a 21" desktop monitor, a 13" laptop, a 10" iPad or a much smaller smartphone. Responsive web design uses @media queries to change the layout of the page using CSS based on browser width. You might have CSS that looks like this:

And yes, you could go smaller than that, or have intermediate sizes, but I'll cover that later.

viewports

Now this works reasonably well when you resize desktop browsers4, but not so much for mobile browsers. The problem is that mobile browsers (iPhone/Safari, Android/Chrome and Fennec) assume that the page were designed for a wide screen, and shrink it to fit into the smaller screen. This means that even though users could have had a good customised experience for their smaller devices, they won't because the device doesn't know about this5. The trick is to use Apple's viewport6, 7, 8 meta tag in your document's head in conjunction with @media queries9:

<meta name="viewport" content="...">

I've left the content attribute empty for now because this is where I see confusion... which is what we'll talk about now.

width=device-width

Most sites that I've seen advise you to set the content attribute to width=device-width. This tells the browser to assume that the page is as wide as the device. Unfortunately, this is only true when your device is in the portrait orientation. When you rotate to landscape, the device-width remains the same (eg: 320px), which means that even if your page were designed to work well in a 480px landscape design, it would still be rendered as if it were 320px.

It's tempting to use the orientation media query to solve this problem, but orientation doesn't really tell you the actual width of the device. All it tells you is whether the width is larger than or smaller than the device's height. As ppk points out5, since most pages tend to scroll vertically, this is irrelevant.

Use this if you use the same page styles in portrait and landscape orientation. Also note that using width=device-width is the only way to tell android devices to use the device's width12.

initial-scale=1.0,maximum-scale=1.0

Setting initial-scale=1 tells the browser not to zoom in or out regardless of what it thinks the page width is. This is good when you've designed your page to fit different widths since the browser will use the appropriate CSS rules for its own width, and initial-scale stops the zooming problem that we faced without the viewport meta tag.

Unfortunately a bug, or more likely a mis-feature, in mobile safari messes this up when a device is rotated from portrait to landscape mode. initial-scale is honoured only on full page load. On rotate from portrait to landscape mode, the browser assumes that the page width stays the same and scales accordingly (1.5) to make 320 pixels fit into 480pixels. However, as far as @media queries go, it reports a 480px width, and uses the appropriate CSS rules to render the page. This results in a page designed for 480px rendered scaled up 1.5 times. It's not horrible, but it's not desirable. Fennec claims8 that it does the right thing in this case. The Android emulator is impossible to work with and I haven't tested on mobile Opera yet.

To get around this bug, the pixel perfection camp suggests also setting maximum-scale=1. This stops the page zoom in on rotate, but it has the undesired side effect of preventing the user from zooming the page. This is a problem from the accessibility point of view. Zooming in is a very valid use case for users with bad eyesight, and in some cases, even users with good eyesight who just want a closer look at some part of your page. Do this only if you hate your users. It goes without saying that setting user-scalable=no should also not be used on most general purpose pages.

A better solution may be design your page to use the same styles in portrait and landscape orientation and set width=device-width. This way even if it does zoom, it will still be proportionate. See Lanyrd10 for an example of this design.

width=<actual width>

Some sites advise using a specific viewport width and designing your pages for that width. This is fine if you're building a separate page for each device class, but that doesn't flow with the concept of responsive design. Fixed width layouts are for print. The web is fluid and adapts to its users. Your site should too. Don't use this.

@media all and (device-width:480)

While this is a media query rather than an option to the viewport meta tag, I've seen it at various locations, and don't think it's the best option around. Here's why. According to the CSS3 media queries spec11, the device-width media feature describes the width of the rendering surface of the output device. For continuous media, this is the width of the screen. For paged media, this is the width of the page sheet size.

We're dealing with continuous media here (on-screen as opposed to printed), in which case the spec states that this is the width of the screen. Unless the browser window is maximised, this might be larger than the viewport with. My tests show that most desktop browsers treat device-width and width as synonyms. Mobile browsers seem a little confused on the matter. As far as the viewport meta tag goes, device-width is the width of the device in portrait orientation only. For a 320x480 device, device-width is always 320px regardless of orientation. For CSS media queries, however, device-width is the width of the screen based on its current orientation.

If you are going to use this, use it in conjunction with the orientation media feature. Never use max-device-width and min-device-width. It's better to use max-width and min-width instead. Also remember that device widths may change with newer models. You want your design to be future proof.

Intermediate widths

I'd mentioned above that you could design for any number of widths. The important thing is to test your page for different browser widths. This is fairly easy to do just by resizing your browser window. Test, and whenever you find your page layout break, either fix the layout for all widths, or build a new layout for smaller widths.

On bluesmoon.info, I change many parts of the page depending on page width. The default design (at the time of this article) has 5% empty space around the content. This is fine really wide screens (1152px or more), but as you get smaller, the empty space becomes a waste. Below 1152px, I shrink this to 2% and below 1024px, I get rid of it completely. You could say that my page content was really built for 1024px. This design also works for the iPad in landscape mode.

Below 1000px, all 3 column pages switch to a 2 column layout. Below 580px, I move the right column on all pages below the main content. All pages that initially had 3 columns now have 2 columns below the main content.

As we get smaller, I reduce the space used by non-essential content like the footer, the sidebars and the menu at the top, leaving as much space as possible for main content. Finally, when we get below 380px, the whole page turns into a single column layout.

This is of course, just an example. Your own site may have a layout that works perfectly at all screen widths, or you may need to design only two or three layouts. It's easy to test and design, so there's no reason not to. Designing for multiple widths took me just a couple of hours, and a lot of it was spent reading the articles below.

Recommendations

So finally, this is what I recommend.

DO use the viewport meta tag

DO use media queries to render your page appropriately for various widths ranging from under 200px to 1024px or more

DO use width=device-width,initial-scale=1 in your viewport meta tag OR use width=device-width alone12.

DO NOT use maximum-scale=1 or user-scalable=no

DO NOT use width=<specific width>

DO NOT use @media all and (*-device-width: xxx)

Remember that using initial-scale=1.0 throws you open to a zooming bug in mobile Safari. Push Safari to fix this bug. Finally, David Calhoun has a great summary13 of all options to the viewport meta tag, and alternate meta tags for older phones. Well worth a read. Also note that Mozilla's documentation8 of the viewport meta tag is far better than Safari's7.

Webkit based desktop browsers re-render the page correctly as you resize the browser, however they have a minimum width of 385px (on MacOSX) and I was unable to shrink the browser below this. Firefox 4 re-renders the page correctly until the width gets too narrow to fit the navigation toolbar. At that point the viewport width stays fixed even if you shrink the browser. The page is re-rendered if you type something (anything) into the URL bar. Opera 10/11 re-render correctly at all sizes.

If you design your page for the narrow view and expect it to scale when rotated, then use width=device-width and nothing else. If, instead, you design your page for either width, then use width=device-width,initial-scale=1. This is the only way to get the android browser to render a page with the intended width. Mobile Safari will render the page exactly as if initial-scale=1 were specified alone. You will still end up with the zoom on rotate bug.

@Paul, @Divya using both of them is the same as using only initial-scale=1. If you're going to use width=device-width (presumably because that's what you've designed for), then you shouldn't include initial-scale=1.

@Unknown: setting the viewport meta tag does not actually change the screen settings, it just tells the browser to assume those settings when scaling. But you should never ever use the rules you've specified... unless you hate your users.

@Ratata the point of media queries is to stop thinking about specific devices, and program based on the capabilities you detect. That's the only way to be future compatible. For example, the screen sizes for the iPhone 4 and iPhone 5 are different, and who's to say what 6 will be like.

Hi Phillip, thanks for this - really handy. I'm just starting to get my head round fluid, responsive design for the first time and this is proving useful.

One issue I'm having with testing on my iPhone 4: when I set the viewport to width=device-width, for some reason it seems to show the page content zoomed in by 200%. (ie my logo is a GIF 198 px wide, but doing a screengrab of what appears and counting pixels, it's showing the logo at 396 px wide). Any thoughts why this might be?!

I'm afraid I don't have an answer to that question. My first thought was something to do with retina, but the iPhone 4 doesn't have a retina display. Could there be something else on the page that resizes it? Hard to tell without seeing the site in question.

"@media all " is a bit too encompassing as it also includes the print CSS layout. I would target devices using "@media screen" and handle print separately as you are dealing with letter/A4 document sizes.